On Thu, 2020-07-16 at 18:54 -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > [+cc Sasha -- stable kernel regression] > [+cc Patrick, Kai-Heng, LKML] > > On Fri, Jul 17, 2020 at 12:10:39AM +0200, Karol Herbst wrote: > > On Tue, Jul 7, 2020 at 9:30 PM Karol Herbst <kherbst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Hi everybody, > > > > > > with the mentioned commit Nouveau isn't able to load firmware onto the > > > GPU on one of my systems here. Even though the issue doesn't always > > > happen I am quite confident this is the commit breaking it. > > > > > > I am still digging into the issue and trying to figure out what > > > exactly breaks, but it shows up in different ways. Either we are not > > > able to boot the engines on the GPU or the GPU becomes unresponsive. > > > Btw, this is also a system where our runtime power management issue > > > shows up, so maybe there is indeed something funky with the bridge > > > controller. > > > > > > Just pinging you in case you have an idea on how this could break Nouveau > > > > > > most of the times it shows up like this: > > > nouveau 0000:01:00.0: acr: AHESASC binary failed > > > > > > Sometimes it works at boot and fails at runtime resuming with random > > > faults. So I will be investigating a bit more, but yeah... I am super > > > sure the commit triggered this issue, no idea if it actually causes > > > it. > > > > so yeah.. I reverted that locally and never ran into issues again. > > Still valid on latest 5.7. So can we get this reverted or properly > > fixed? This breaks runtime pm for us on at least some hardware. > > Yeah, that stinks. We had another similar report from Patrick: > > > https://lore.kernel.org/r/CAErSpo5sTeK_my1dEhWp7aHD0xOp87+oHYWkTjbL7ALgDbXo-Q@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Apparently the problem is ec411e02b7a2 ("PCI/PM: Assume ports without > DLL Link Active train links in 100 ms"), which Patrick found was > backported to v5.4.49 as 828b192c57e8, and you found was backported to > v5.7.6 as afaff825e3a4. > > Oddly, Patrick reported that v5.7.7 worked correctly, even though it > still contains afaff825e3a4. > > I guess in the absence of any other clues we'll have to revert it. > I hate to do that because that means we'll have slow resume of > Thunderbolt-connected devices again, but that's better than having > GPUs completely broken. > > Could you and Patrick open bugzilla.kernel.org reports, attach dmesg > logs and "sudo lspci -vv" output, and add the URLs to Kai-Heng's > original report at https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=206837 > and to this thread? > > There must be a way to fix the slow resume problem without breaking > the GPUs. Isn't it possible to tell whether a PCI device is connected through thunderbolt or not? We could probably get away with just defaulting to 100ms for thunderbolt devices without DLL Link Active specified, and then default to the old delay value for non-thunderbolt devices. > > Bjorn > _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel